Lynne's wrongfully imprisoned. She's one of America's best. For 30 years, she defended its poor, underprivileged, unwanted, and forgotten. Without advocates like her, they're denied due process and judicial fairness.

America's gulag prison system shames the nation. It's a crime against humanity. It's by far the world's largest. It's one of the worst. Many in it shouldn't be there.

Blacks and Latinos comprise two-thirds of its population. They're society's most vulnerable. Around half imprisoned are for nonviolent offenses. Many are elicit drug related. They're captives under cruel and inhumane conditions.

Mandatory minimum sentences exacerbate things. So do racist and other deplorable policies. They include pervasive judicial unfairness, three strikes and you're out, get tough on crime harshness, and a guilty unless proved innocent mentality.

In his book "Race to Incarcerate," Marc Mauer discussed America's obsession with imprisonment, punishment, the commodification of prisoners, and rage to fill prison beds.

Countless numbers of political prisoners fill them. The Free Dictionary calls them people "who have been imprisoned for holding or advocating dissenting political views....for holding, expressing, or acting in accord with particular political beliefs."

The Oxford Dictionaries definition is "a person imprisoned for their political beliefs or actions."

In the 1960s, Amnesty International (AI) coined the term "prisoner of conscience." It refers to anyone incarcerated for their race, religion, ethnicity, language, sexual orientation, beliefs, or lifestyle.

In a London Guardian/Observer May 28, 1961 article titled, "The Forgotten Prisoners," AI's founder Peter Benenson (1921 - 2005) defined the term as follows:

"Any person who is physically restrained (in prison or otherwise) for expressing any opinion which he (or she) honestly holds and which does not advocate or condone personal violence."

"Open your newspaper any day of the week, and you will find a report from somewhere in the world of someone being imprisoned, tortured or executed because his (or her) opinions or religion are unacceptable to his (or her) government."

"That is why we have started Appeal for Amnesty (AI), 1961. The campaign, which opens today, is the result of an initiative by a group of lawyers, writers and publishers in London, who share the underlying conviction expressed by Voltaire: 'I detest your views, but am prepared to die for your right to express them.' "

Howard Zinn called dissent "the highest form of patriotism."

"In fact, if patriotism means being true to the principles for which your country is supposed to stand, then certainly the right to dissent is one of those principles."

"And if we're exercising that right to dissent, it's a patriotic act."

"One of the great mistakes (about) patriotism....is to think (it) means support for your government."

"When governments have become destructive (of life, liberty and equality), it is the right of the people....to alter or abolish" it.

In her 1999 article titled, "Prisons, Social Control and Political Prisoners," former political prisoner Marilyn Buck discussed what too few understand.

She called prisons warehouses to "disappear the unacceptable....to deprive their captives of their liberties, their human agency, and to punish....(to) stigmatize prisoners through moralistic denunciations and indictment based on bad genes - skin color (ethnicity, or other characteristics) as a crime."

Countless numbers of prisoners in America aren't incarcerated "because they are 'criminals,' but because they've been accused of breaking (a law) designed to exert tighter social control and State repression."

At issue is scapegoating, demonizing, and criminalizing them for their beliefs and activism.

Police state America targets them. It brutalizes them. It locks them in cages. It does so for opposing war, resisting injustice, and/or defending freedom, equality and human rights.

In the Vol. 18, 2002 Harvard BlackLetter Law Journal, J. Soffiyah Elijah headlined, "The Reality of Political Prisoners in the United States: What September 11 Taught Us About Defending Them," saying:

In a post-9/11 climate, they "and their lawyers have been targeted for renewed abuse."

Michael Steven Smith co-hosts WBAI's Law and Disorder. He's a Center for Constitutional Rights board member. He's a lawyer like Lynne. He discussed her sentencing.

On April 9, 2010, she was wrongly indicted. On February 10, 2005, she was convicted on all counts. On October 17, 2006, she was sentenced to 28 months imprisonment.

On November 17, 2009, the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit three-judge panel upheld the conviction. It falsely accused her of "knowingly and willfully making false statements."

It redirected her case to District Court Judge John Koeltl. I did so for resentencing. It instructed him to consider enhancements for terrorism, perjury, and abuse of her position as a lawyer. Koeltl was intimidated to comply.

On November 19, 2009, Lynne was interned at MCC-NY. Doing so preceded her transfer to Federal Medical Center (FMC) Carswell, Fort Worth, TX.

On July 15, 2010, Lynne was resentenced to 10 years imprisonment. It was for doing her job honorably, ethically, and heroically for 30 years.

Smith was there. "Judge John Koeltl buried her alive," he said. "We should have seen it coming when he told her to take all the time she needed at the start when she spoke before the sentence was read."

"It didn’t matter what she said. He had already written his decision, which he read out loud to a courtroom packed with supporters."

He "laid it on her: 120 months….He had given her a death sentence….She'll never get out."

Lynne's lawyer Jill Shellow Levine asked why so harsh. "He was candid. He was told to do it by his supervisors, the judges on the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit."

It's "an institution for the elite." It's second only to the Supreme Court. It presides over America's financial center. It "makes policy…."

It made an example of Lynne. She's a war on terror victim. Koeltl got his marching orders. He threw the book at her. He nearly quadrupled her sentence.

He put an aging grandmother "on chemotherapy away for ten years and two year's probation after that for good measure."

"This is much more than meanness. It is ideology." It reflects America's dark side. It ravages humanity. It does so for wealth, power, privilege and dominance.

It targets non-believers. It does so unjustly. Lynne's one of countless political prisoners. Societies are best judged by how they treat their most disadvantaged, children and prisoners. America ranks with the worst.

"Understand," she said, "that the attack on me is a subterfuge for an attack on all lawyers who advocate without fear of Government displeasure, with intellectual honesty guided by their knowledge and their client's desire for his or her case."

Over 10,000 supporters worldwide petitioned for her compassionate release. She hopes that "effort can be a crack in the American bastion."

Join others and sign it. Do it because it matters. Spread the word. Urge others to sign. Access it through the following link:

The Jericho Movement supports "amnesty and freedom for all political prisoners." It published her family's message. Her husband Ralph is a longtime human rights advocate.

"Lynne Stewart has devoted her life to the oppressed," it said. She's imprisoned for "providing her client(s) with a fearless defense." Doing so reflects "an assault upon the basic freedoms of us all."

"We cry out against the bureaucratic murder of Lynne Stewart. We demand (her) immediate release to receive urgent medical care in a supportive environment….(We) call upon the Bureau of Prisons to act immediately."

Lynne's struggling to survive. Free her now. Doing the right thing is its own reward. Lynne worked tirelessly for justice. She deserves its full measure and more in her time of need.